Tuesday , December 3 2024
Home / Real-World Economics Review / The representative consumer has to die

The representative consumer has to die

Summary:
Recently, Robert Lucas, who was called an economist, died. This is not about him, but about his kind of economics as tweets and obituaries show that it is not yet generally understood what kind of science the neoclassical macro-economist like him produced. Their most egregious failure: after decades of work, they do not even have a shimmer of anything which could pass for a neoclassical way to estimate the macro economy, even when their ideas are squarely at odds with the macro economy as we measure it. Theory without measurement. Lucas used – like many others – the concept of the representative consumer. A macro economic model which presupposes that the economy consists of 1 person, A Robinson Crusoe model – or fantasy? Which is faulty, as the essence of a macro economy – its

Topics:
Merijn T. Knibbe considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

Jim Stanford writes Interrogating the ‘Vibecession’

Lars Pålsson Syll writes Busting the ‘natural rate of unemployment’ myth

Merijn T. Knibbe writes The political economy of estimating productivity.

Merijn T. Knibbe writes Peak babies has been. Young men are not expendable, anymore.

Recently, Robert Lucas, who was called an economist, died. This is not about him, but about his kind of economics as tweets and obituaries show that it is not yet generally understood what kind of science the neoclassical macro-economist like him produced. Their most egregious failure: after decades of work, they do not even have a shimmer of anything which could pass for a neoclassical way to estimate the macro economy, even when their ideas are squarely at odds with the macro economy as we measure it. Theory without measurement.

Lucas used – like many others – the concept of the representative consumer. A macro economic model which presupposes that the economy consists of 1 person, A Robinson Crusoe model – or fantasy? Which is faulty, as the essence of a macro economy – its foundational essence, its sine qua non, its deepest core – is that a macro-economy consists of multiple persons who are interrelated by economic, political and legal ties. And by monetary ties, too. Money is undefined in the 1 person economy of much neoclassical macro. I now: nowadays we have HANK models, Heterogenous Agent models which have more than 1 consumer/producer, like: capitalists owning all the capital used to employ others and workers only owning capital they use themselves, to give it a Marxist twist. That’s better – but not yet good enough.

What’s special about macro-economics? Macro economics studies interpersonal concepts like:

  • Inequality (wealth, income). For the record: we do measure macro-inequality.
  • Unemployment (requires employers and employees and is carefully conceptualized, including ‘broad unemployment’, and measured)
  • Paradoxes (like the paradox of thrift: when everybody starts to save a larger part of his or her monetary income, monetary expenditure and income goes down and nobody saves more money)
  • Fallacies of composition. This is the ‘as a single H2O atom can’t freeze, water can’t freeze either’ fallacy. Often, the paradox of thrift is mentioned as an economic example. But that’s only one of a whole set of (monetary) examples. Going directly to the representative consumer model: this assumes that as single person doesn’t trade in a monetary sense and doesn’t need money, the macro economy also doesn’t need money as we know it and measure it and use it. This also compasses the idea of emergent variables. The ‘skateability of a frozen lake’ is an emergent variable, so is a financial crisis in a monetary economy.
  • Sectoral flows, i.e. flows between sectors of the economy which below to different clusters and have different elasticities of demand and production, different locations and use different technologies with differences between capital and labor coefficients, as measured by the share of capital income and labor income. Input-output models are based on this idea and they are based on the main macro-economic measurement system, the national accounts which contains sectoral accounts (which, hence, does NOT model the economy as a single entity).
  • Business cycles as intersectoral, intertemporal and monetary events (even when, inspired by the work of Wesley Mitchell, this is the way it’s measured by the NBER, USA cycles are measured as inherently historical processes)
  • The factors of production are Labour, Physical capital and Land and Natural Resources. The (ownership of) Land and Natural Resources is an element of (international) macro economics. Needless to say that Land and Natural Resources are excluded from neoclassical macro in the style of Robert Lukas.
  • Rent income

The list is not exhaustive. But instead of studying such measured real world phenomena, neoclassical macro economists chose to analyze economic LaLa Land – again, without constructing even a shimmer of a way to measure their idea of macro. Fun fact: some of the models use ‘labor’ as a variable but forget to define it as hours or persons. That should not even happen in an economics 101 paper. Vague, fussy and useless. Forget it.

P.S. – in my tropical island fantasies, I’m not alone…

Merijn T. Knibbe
Economic historian, statistician, outdoor guide (coastal mudflats), father, teacher, blogger. Likes De Kift and El Greco. Favorite epoch 1890-1930.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *